Related Content

The ballots did not include Amendment 5, but gave voters the chance to log their preference twice for Amendments 1, 2 and 3.

"I have an ability to vote for the constitutional Amendment 1, 2 and 3 two times," said Boca Raton voter Nadine Waldman, who received her absentee ballot while on a family trip to the suburbs of Philadelphia. "And I do not have the ability to vote for constitutional Amendment No. 5 because it's missing from my ballot."

This comes after an issue earlier this month involving about 60,000 ballots in Palm Beach County.

Supervisor of Elections Susan Bucher said an Arizona printing company was to blame for the error. But the president of Runbeck Election Services told WPBF 25 News' Cathleen O'Toole that his company isn't responsible for this latest mistake.

"That is absolutely incorrect," said Bucher. "It is his field technicians that are at our early voting sites that we have printing our daily ballots."

Election officials have had to painstakingly copy all of those ballots by hand.

The problems are eerily reminiscent of 2000, when Palm Beach County was at the epicenter of the error-plagued election.

"I don't want no dimpled chad, no pregnant chad," said Claudette Schoberg, who braved a long line to cast an early vote in Riviera Beach. "I'm not into that. I need my vote to be counted."